Author: Claude, Shenchao TechFlow
Shenchao Introduction: One week after the Robinhood Chain mainnet launch, while the officially promoted stock token hasn't gone viral yet, a Meme cat called CASHCAT has taken off first, with its price surging over 1700% in 24 hours at one point and its market cap exceeding $120M. Its entire narrative boils down to one sentence: the working name for Robinhood during its startup phase was CashCat. CEO Tenev himself shared this history and even tweeted a meme on the day of the surge. Meanwhile, copycat tokens and fake 'Roaring Kitty' shilling accounts are already in position.

Attracting traffic and retail investor attention still depends on Memes.
Robinhood spent a year paving the way for its own blockchain, pitching tokenized stocks as the core story. However, the first truly viral asset on the chain turned out to be a cartoon cat holding cash.
According to GMGN monitoring, on July 8th, the market capitalization of the Meme token CASHCAT on Robinhood Chain exceeded $120 million, with a 24-hour increase of over 1700%. In the following hours, readings from different data platforms continued to rise. According to CoinGecko data, CASHCAT primarily trades on the Uniswap V3 deployed on Robinhood Chain, with the CASHCAT/WETH pair seeing a 24-hour trading volume of approximately $28 million. For a new chain that has only been live for a week and has very few ecosystem applications, this cat is the current traffic itself.
Seventh Day Post-Mainnet Launch, The First Viral Asset Is a Meme
First, some background.
On July 1st, Robinhood officially launched the public mainnet for Robinhood Chain at an event in London. This is an Ethereum Layer 2 based on Arbitrum technology, unveiled by CEO Vlad Tenev and crypto business head Johann Kerbrat. The official positioning of this chain is quite 'serious'. Its core product, Stock Tokens, tracks the price performance of over 200 US stocks and ETFs and is open to users in over 120 jurisdictions (excluding US users). DeFi protocols like Uniswap and 1inch were deployed on day one, and Robinhood pledged to cover all Gas fees for the first 90 days.
According to the official script, the protagonists of this chain should have been tokenized stocks and RWA (Real World Assets). However, the script didn't follow the plan. In the first week after the mainnet launch, the most actively traded pair on the chain wasn't any stock token, but CASHCAT. Retail investors set the tone for this 'retail broker's chain' first.
A clear warning for holders: CASHCAT's current trading depth is concentrated on a single trading pair within a single DEX. Liquidity is thin on a new chain, price readings vary significantly across platforms, and both slippage and wick risk upon entry/exit are far higher than for Memes on mature chains.
Archaeology of the 'Original Name', Tenev Himself Told the CashCat Story
CASHCAT's success relies on a real piece of company history.
In early interviews, Tenev recalled the company naming process: "The original working name was actually CashCat, but everyone felt it wasn't powerful enough. My wife would introduce me to her friends by saying, 'They're the Robin Hoods of finance, doing things for the little guy.' That's how the name Robinhood stuck." This account has been cited in numerous company retrospectives after the GameStop saga, making it verifiable 'archaeological material.' This is the biggest difference between CASHCAT and other cat/dog coins built on fabricated stories.
The token's structure is as simple as it gets. According to the project's website, the total supply is 1 billion tokens, with zero buy/sell taxes. The liquidity pool tokens have been fully burned, and it self-identifies as "zero utility, one hundred percent cat." The website also explicitly states that the project has no affiliation with Robinhood, calling it "fan fiction with a ticker."
The narrative is real, the product is unrelated. Readers need to distinguish these two facts: Robinhood's history provides this cat with viral material, but the company does not endorse it. The token's value is built entirely on attention, with no safety net when that attention fades.

Tenev Tweets Meme, Market Interprets It as Semi-Endorsement
What truly pushed the frenzy to its peak was Tenev himself.
On July 8th, Tenev posted on X (formerly Twitter): "We're making Robinhood Chain the best RWA public chain... but it runs Memes really well too." The post garnered over 500,000 views within hours. While he didn't mention CASHCAT by name, the timing coincided with the day of the massive surge. The community interpreted it as implicit approval, if not an assist, for the Meme frenzy on the chain.
There's a layer of historical irony here. During the 2021 GameStop short squeeze, Robinhood was thrust into Congressional hearings for restricting retail buys of GME, becoming the 'villain' in the retail narrative. Five years later, this company's blockchain completes its cold start, precisely relying on the Meme culture that retail investors excel at, with the object of speculation being the name the company itself discarded. The CASHCAT website even specifically plays on this irony: "Cash Cat doesn't do options, and it doesn't do PFOF (Payment for Order Flow)."

For traders, it's necessary to heavily discount the actual value of this tweet. A playful tweet from Tenev and an official Robinhood endorsement are separated by an entire compliance department. The company has no commitments regarding custody, listing, or providing liquidity for the Meme token. The effectiveness of such sentiment catalysts typically lasts only hours.
Copycat Tokens and Fake 'Roaring Kitty' Accounts Are Already in Position
Once the heat arrived, the tools to hunt retail investors followed.
First, cross-chain copycat tokens. According to aggregated monitoring information from CoinGecko, an identically named CASHCAT has already been deployed on the Solana chain. The original contract is deployed on Robinhood Chain with an address starting with 0x020b and ending with 18b4; identically named tokens on other chains are unrelated to the original.
Second, impersonator accounts shilling. For example, an X account with the handle "RK" and a username highly similar to GameStop saga protagonist 'Roaring Kitty' Keith Gill tweeted, "CASHCAT is the first major Meme on Robinhood chain," and included a Solana contract address in the post.
New chain, new Meme, fake accounts, cross-chain copycats—this combination has claimed victims in every past Meme cycle. If you still decide to participate now, at least do these three things: verify the contract address, use only official or reputable cross-chain bridges, and keep your position size to lottery-ticket levels.
CASHCAT's current total value is just a good story plus a wave of attention, neither of which has a retention mechanism.






